CMS logoCMS event Hgg
Compact Muon Solenoid
LHC, CERN

CMS-B2G-16-005 ; CERN-EP-2016-290
Search for electroweak production of a vector-like quark decaying to a top quark and a Higgs boson using boosted topologies in fully hadronic final states
JHEP 04 (2017) 136
Abstract: A search is performed for electroweak production of a vector-like top quark partner T of charge 2/3 in association with a standard model top or bottom quark, using 2.3 fb$^{-1}$ of proton-proton collision data at $\sqrt{s}= $ 13 TeV collected by the CMS experiment at the CERN LHC. The search targets T quarks decaying to a top quark and a Higgs boson in fully hadronic final states. For a T quark with mass above 1 TeV the daughter top quark and Higgs boson are highly Lorentz-boosted and can each appear as a single hadronic jet. Jet substructure and b tagging techniques are used to identify the top quark and Higgs boson jets, and to suppress the standard model backgrounds. An excess of events is searched for in the T quark candidate mass distribution in the data, which is found to be consistent with the expected backgrounds. Upper limits at 95% confidence level are set on the product of the single T quark production cross sections and the branching fraction $\mathcal{B}({\mathrm{T}} \to \mathrm{ t }\mathrm{ H })$, and these vary between 0.31 and 0.93 pb for T quark masses in the range 1000-1800 GeV. This is the first search for single electroweak production of a vector-like T quark in fully hadronic final states.
Figures & Tables Summary References CMS Publications
Figures

png pdf
Figure 1:
Example production diagrams for the processes ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ b } \mathrm{ q } }$ via the charged current (left) and ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ q } }$ via the neutral current (right).

png pdf
Figure 1-a:
Example production diagram for the process ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ b } \mathrm{ q } }$ via the charged current.

png pdf
Figure 1-b:
Example production diagram for the process ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ q } }$ via the neutral current.

png pdf
Figure 2:
The simulated ${M(\mathrm {T})}$ distributions for the ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ b } \mathrm{ q } } $ and the ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ q } } $ production modes with left-handed coupling for the T quark masses 1000, 1200, 1500, and 1800 GeV, after all selection criteria have been applied. The values of product of the signal cross sections and the branching fraction $\mathcal {B}( { {\mathrm {T}} \to \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ H } } )$ are taken to be 1 pb.

png pdf
Figure 3:
The ${H_{\mathrm {T}}}$ (left) and ${M(\mathrm {T})}$ (right) distributions after full event selection. The black markers with error bars are the data. The various background components are shown as filled histograms, and are estimated using simulations ($ {{\mathrm{ t } {}\mathrm{ \bar{t} } } \text {+jets}}$ and ${\mathrm{ W } \text {+jets}} $) and the data (non-$ {{\mathrm{ t } {}\mathrm{ \bar{t} } } \text {+jets}}$ and non-$ {\mathrm{ W } \text {+jets}}$ multijets component). The simulated T quark signal distributions for two T quark masses are also shown. The values of product of the signal cross sections and the branching fraction $\mathcal {B}( { {\mathrm {T}} \to \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ H } } )$ are taken to be 1 pb.

png pdf
Figure 3-a:
The ${H_{\mathrm {T}}}$ distribution after full event selection. The black markers with error bars are the data. The various background components are shown as filled histograms, and are estimated using simulations ($ {{\mathrm{ t } {}\mathrm{ \bar{t} } } \text {+jets}}$ and ${\mathrm{ W } \text {+jets}} $) and the data (non-$ {{\mathrm{ t } {}\mathrm{ \bar{t} } } \text {+jets}}$ and non-$ {\mathrm{ W } \text {+jets}}$ multijets component). The simulated T quark signal distributions for two T quark masses are also shown. The values of product of the signal cross sections and the branching fraction $\mathcal {B}( { {\mathrm {T}} \to \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ H } } )$ are taken to be 1 pb.

png pdf
Figure 3-b:
The ${M(\mathrm {T})}$ distribution after full event selection. The black markers with error bars are the data. The various background components are shown as filled histograms, and are estimated using simulations ($ {{\mathrm{ t } {}\mathrm{ \bar{t} } } \text {+jets}}$ and ${\mathrm{ W } \text {+jets}} $) and the data (non-$ {{\mathrm{ t } {}\mathrm{ \bar{t} } } \text {+jets}}$ and non-$ {\mathrm{ W } \text {+jets}}$ multijets component). The simulated T quark signal distributions for two T quark masses are also shown. The values of product of the signal cross sections and the branching fraction $\mathcal {B}( { {\mathrm {T}} \to \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ H } } )$ are taken to be 1 pb.

png pdf
Figure 4:
The expected and observed 95% confidence level upper limits on the product of the signal cross section and the branching fraction $\mathcal {B}( { {\mathrm {T}} \to \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ H } } )$ for the processes ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ b } \mathrm{ q } }$ (upper figures) and ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ q } }$ (lower figures), for different assumed values of the T quark mass, and with left-handed (left figures) and right-handed (right figures) couplings to the standard model third-generation quarks. The expected 1 and 2 standard deviation (s. d.) uncertainty bands are also shown. The limits are obtained assuming a resonance width of 10 GeV for the T quark. The dot-dashed curves in the upper left and lower right figures correspond to those predicted by the Simplest Simplified Model of Refs. [18,59], which predicts the existence of a left-handed and right-handed coupling for a singlet and doublet T quark, respectively. The benchmark coupling parameter values of $ {c^{{\mathrm{ b } \mathrm{ W } }}} _\mathrm {L} =$ 0.5 and $ {c^{\mathrm{ t } {\mathrm{ Z } } }} _\mathrm {R} = $ 0.5 are chosen for the comparison.

png pdf
Figure 4-a:
The expected and observed 95% confidence level upper limit on the product of the signal cross section and the branching fraction $\mathcal {B}( { {\mathrm {T}} \to \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ H } } )$ for the processes ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ b } \mathrm{ q } }$, for different assumed values of the T quark mass, and with left-handed couplings to the standard model third-generation quarks. The expected 1 and 2 standard deviation (s. d.) uncertainty bands are also shown. The limits are obtained assuming a resonance width of 10 GeV for the T quark. The dot-dashed curve corresponds to that predicted by the Simplest Simplified Model of Refs. [18,59], which predicts the existence of a left-handed coupling for a singlet T quark. The benchmark coupling parameter value of $ {c^{{\mathrm{ b } \mathrm{ W } }}} _\mathrm {L} =$ 0.5 is chosen for the comparison.

png pdf
Figure 4-b:
The expected and observed 95% confidence level upper limit on the product of the signal cross section and the branching fraction $\mathcal {B}( { {\mathrm {T}} \to \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ H } } )$ for the processes ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ b } \mathrm{ q } }$, for different assumed values of the T quark mass, and with right-handed couplings to the standard model third-generation quarks. The expected 1 and 2 standard deviation (s. d.) uncertainty bands are also shown. The limits are obtained assuming a resonance width of 10 GeV for the T quark.

png pdf
Figure 4-c:
The expected and observed 95% confidence level upper limit on the product of the signal cross section and the branching fraction $\mathcal {B}( { {\mathrm {T}} \to \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ H } } )$ for the processes ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ b } \mathrm{ q } }$, for different assumed values of the T quark mass, and with left-handed couplings to the standard model third-generation quarks. The expected 1 and 2 standard deviation (s. d.) uncertainty bands are also shown. The limits are obtained assuming a resonance width of 10 GeV for the T quark.

png pdf
Figure 4-d:
The expected and observed 95% confidence level upper limit on the product of the signal cross section and the branching fraction $\mathcal {B}( { {\mathrm {T}} \to \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ H } } )$ for the processes ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ q } }$, for different assumed values of the T quark mass, and with lright-handed couplings to the standard model third-generation quarks. The expected 1 and 2 standard deviation (s. d.) uncertainty bands are also shown. The limits are obtained assuming a resonance width of 10 GeV for the T quark. The dot-dashed curve corresponds to that predicted by the Simplest Simplified Model of Refs. [18,59], which predicts the existence of a right-handed coupling for a doublet T quark. The benchmark coupling parameter value of $ {c^{\mathrm{ t } {\mathrm{ Z } } }} _\mathrm {R} = $ 0.5 is chosen for the comparison.
Tables

png pdf
Table 1:
The signal efficiencies for successive event selections for the ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ b } \mathrm{ q } }$ and ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ q } }$ models with left-handed couplings. The preselection criteria are more efficient for the ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ q } }$ process compared to the ${\mathrm{ p } \mathrm{ p } \to {\mathrm {T}} \mathrm{ b } \mathrm{ q } }$ process owing to the larger number of jets, and hence a higher $ {H_{\mathrm {T}}} $ per event, in the former. This is more pronounced for low T quark mass samples, where the ${H_{\mathrm {T}}}$ is close to the trigger threshold of 800 GeV.

png pdf
Table 2:
Number of events for the control regions A, B, and C in the data, and in the non-multijet backgrounds. The difference between the data and the ${{\mathrm{ t } {}\mathrm{ \bar{t} } } \text {+jets}} $, ${\mathrm{ W } \text {+jets}} $, and the $\mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ W } $ backgrounds is attributed to the multijets background component. The uncertainties are statistical only.

png pdf
Table 3:
Estimated background and the number of observed events in the signal region after all selection criteria. The combined statistical and systematic uncertainty is shown.

png pdf
Table 4:
The observed and expected 95% confidence level upper limits on the product of the signal cross sections and the branching fraction $\cal {B}( { {\mathrm {T}} \to \mathrm{ t } \mathrm{ H } } )$, for various masses of the T quark.
Summary
A search for a vector-like top quark partner T in the single production mode is performed using proton-proton collision events at $ \sqrt{s} = $ 13 TeV collected by the CMS experiment in 2015. The T quarks are assumed to couple only to the standard model third-generation quarks. The decay channel exploited is ${{\mathrm{T}} \to \mathrm{t } \mathrm{ H }} $, with hadronic top quark decay and ${\mathrm{ H }\to\mathrm{ b \bar{b} }} $. Boosted H and t tagging techniques are used to identify the Higgs boson and the top quark decays in the final state, and the invariant mass of the two gives the T quark candidate mass. The background is mostly due to the standard model ${\mathrm{ t \bar{t} }\text{+jets}} $, with some contribution from multijet and W+jets processes. No significant excess of data above the background is observed in the T quark candidate mass distribution. The 95% confidence level upper limits on the product of the signal cross sections and the branching fraction $\mathcal{B}({{\mathrm{T}} \to \mathrm{t } \mathrm{ H }} )$ are set using Bayesian statistics. These vary between 0.31-0.93 pb for a T quark of mass ranging from 1000 to 1800 GeV, in the ${\mathrm{ p }\mathrm{ p }\to{\mathrm{T}} \mathrm{b }\mathrm{ q }} $ and ${\mathrm{ p }\mathrm{ p }\to{\mathrm{T}} \mathrm{t }\mathrm{ q }} $ production channels with left-handed and right-handed couplings to the standard model third-generation quarks. In the mass range considered for this analysis, the search sensitivity is essentially the same as that using leptonic final states [17]. The use of boosted techniques has led to an extension of the search region beyond those of previous analyses. This is the first time fully hadronic final states have been exploited in the search for single electroweak production of vector-like quarks at a hadron collider.
References
1 M. Schmaltz and D. Tucker-Smith Little Higgs review Ann. Rev. Nucl. Part. Sci. 55 (2005) 229 hep-ph/0502182
2 M. Perelstein, M. E. Peskin, and A. Pierce Top quarks and electroweak symmetry breaking in little Higgs models PRD 69 (2004) 075002 hep-ph/0310039
3 I. Antoniadis, K. Benakli, and M. Quiros Finite Higgs mass without supersymmetry New J. Phys. 3 (2001) 20 hep-th/0108005
4 Y. Hosotani, S. Noda, and K. Takenaga Dynamical gauge-Higgs unification in the electroweak theory PLB 607 (2005) 276 hep-ph/0410193
5 K. Agashe, R. Contino, and A. Pomarol The minimal composite Higgs model Nucl. Phys. B 719 (2005) 165 hep-ph/0412089
6 R. Contino, L. Da Rold, and A. Pomarol Light custodians in natural composite Higgs models PRD 75 (2007) 055014 hep-ph/0612048
7 P. H. Frampton, P. Q. Hung, and M. Sher Quarks and leptons beyond the third generation PR 330 (2000) 263 hep-ph/9903387
8 A. De Simone, O. Matsedonskyi, R. Rattazzi, and A. Wulzer A first top partner hunter's guide JHEP 04 (2013) 004 1211.5663
9 Y. Okada and L. Panizzi LHC signatures of vector-like quarks Adv. High Energy Phys. 2013 (2013) 364936 1207.5607
10 ATLAS and CMS Collaborations Measurements of the Higgs boson production and decay rates and constraints on its couplings from a combined ATLAS and CMS analysis of the LHC pp collision data at $ \sqrt{s}= $ 7 and 8 TeV JHEP 08 (2016) 045 1606.02266
11 ATLAS Collaboration Search for production of vector-like quark pairs and of four top quarks in the lepton-plus-jets final state in pp collisions at $ \sqrt{s}=8 $ TeV with the ATLAS detector JHEP 08 (2015) 105 1505.04306
12 CMS Collaboration Search for vector-like charge 2/3 T quarks in proton-proton collisions at $ \sqrt{s} $ = 8 TeV PRD 93 (2016) 012003 CMS-B2G-13-005
1509.04177
13 ATLAS Collaboration Search for single production of vector-like quarks decaying into $ Wb $ in pp collisions at $ \sqrt{s} = $ 8 TeV with the ATLAS detector EPJC 76 (2016) 442 1602.05606
14 J. A. Aguilar-Saavedra, R. Benbrik, S. Heinemeyer, and M. P\'erez-Victoria Handbook of vectorlike quarks: Mixing and single production PRD 88 (2013) 094010 1306.0572
15 ATLAS and CMS Collaborations Combined Measurement of the Higgs Boson Mass in $ \mathrm{ p }\mathrm{ p } $ Collisions at $ \sqrt{s}= $ 7 and 8 TeV with the ATLAS and CMS Experiments PRL 114 (2015) 191803 1503.07589
16 The LHC Higgs Cross Section Working Group CERN Report 4: Part I Standard Model Predictions CERN Report LHCHXSWG-DRAFT-INT-2016-008, CERN
17 CMS Collaboration Search for single production of a heavy vector-like T quark decaying to a Higgs boson and a top quark with a lepton and jets in the final state Submitted to PLB CMS-B2G-15-008
1612.00999
18 O. Matsedonskyi, G. Panico, and A. Wulzer On the interpretation of Top Partners searches JHEP 12 (2014) 097 1409.0100
19 J. Alwall et al. The automated computation of tree-level and next-to-leading order differential cross sections, and their matching to parton shower simulations JHEP 07 (2014) 079 1405.0301
20 R. D. Ball et al. Parton distributions for the LHC Run II JHEP 04 (2015) 40 1410.8849
21 M. Czakon and A. Mitov Top++: A Program for the Calculation of the Top-Pair Cross-Section at Hadron Colliders CPC 185 (2014) 2930 1112.5675
22 N. Kidonakis Two-loop soft anomalous dimensions for single top quark associated production with a $ {\rm W}^{-} $ or $ {\rm H}^{-} $ PRD 82 (2010) 054018 1005.4451
23 N. Kidonakis Top Quark Production in Proceedings, Helmholtz International Summer School on Physics of Heavy Quarks and Hadrons (HQ 2013), DESY 1311.0283
24 Y. Li and F. Petriello Combining QCD and electroweak corrections to dilepton production in FEWZ PRD 86 (2012) 094034 1208.5967
25 P. Nason A new method for combining NLO QCD with shower Monte Carlo algorithms JHEP 11 (2004) 040 hep-ph/0409146
26 S. Frixione, P. Nason, and C. Oleari Matching NLO QCD computations with Parton Shower simulations: the POWHEG method JHEP 11 (2007) 070 0709.2092
27 S. Alioli, P. Nason, C. Oleari, and E. Re A general framework for implementing NLO calculations in shower Monte Carlo programs: the POWHEG BOX JHEP 06 (2010) 043 1002.2581
28 S. Frixione, G. Ridolfi, and P. Nason A positive-weight next-to-leading-order Monte Carlo for heavy flavour hadroproduction JHEP 09 (2007) 126 0707.3088
29 T. Sjostrand, S. Mrenna, and P. Z. Skands A brief introduction to PYTHIA 8.1 CPC 178 (2008) 852 0710.3820
30 CMS Collaboration Event generator tunes obtained from underlying event and multiparton scattering measurements EPJC 76 (2016) 155 CMS-GEN-14-001
1512.00815
31 M. L. Mangano, M. Moretti, F. Piccinini, and M. Treccani Matching matrix elements and shower evolution for top-quark production in hadronic collisions JHEP 01 (2007) 013 hep-ph/0611129
32 ATLAS Collaboration Measurement of the Inelastic Proton-Proton Cross Section at $ \sqrt{s} = $ 13 TeV with the ATLAS Detector at the LHC Submitted to PRLett 1606.02625
33 J. Allison et al. GEANT4 developments and applications IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. 53 (2006) 270
34 J. Allison et al. Recent developments in Geant4 NIMA 835 (2016) 186
35 CMS Collaboration The CMS experiment at the CERN LHC JINST 3 (2008) S08004 CMS-00-001
36 CMS Collaboration Particle--Flow Event Reconstruction in CMS and Performance for Jets, Taus, and $ E_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text{miss}} $ CDS
37 CMS Collaboration Commissioning of the Particle-flow Event Reconstruction with the first LHC collisions recorded in the CMS detector CDS
38 M. Cacciari, G. P. Salam, and G. Soyez The anti-$ k_t $ jet clustering algorithm JHEP 04 (2008) 063 0802.1189
39 M. Cacciari, G. P. Salam, and G. Soyez FastJet user manual EPJC 72 (2012) 1896 1111.6097
40 M. Cacciari and G. P. Salam Dispelling the $ N^{3} $ myth for the $ k_t $ jet-finder PLB 641 (2006) 57 hep-ph/0512210
41 M. Cacciari and G. P. Salam Pileup subtraction using jet areas PLB 659 (2008) 119 0707.1378
42 CMS Collaboration Determination of jet energy calibration and transverse momentum resolution in CMS JINST 6 (2011) P11002 CMS-JME-10-011
1107.4277
43 CMS Collaboration Jet energy scale and resolution in the CMS experiment in pp collisions at 8 TeV Submitted to JINST CMS-JME-13-004
1607.03663
44 CMS Collaboration Jet Performance in pp Collisions at $ \sqrt{s} = $ 7 TeV CDS
45 G. P. Salam Towards jetography EPJC 67 (2010) 637 0906.1833
46 S. D. Ellis, C. K. Vermilion, and J. R. Walsh Recombination algorithms and jet substructure: Pruning as a Tool for Heavy Particle searches PRD 81 (2010) 094023 0912.0033
47 M. Dasgupta, A. Fregoso, S. Marzani, and G. P. Salam Towards an understanding of jet substructure JHEP 09 (2013) 029 1307.0007
48 A. J. Larkoski, S. Marzani, G. Soyez, and J. Thaler Soft drop JHEP 05 (2014) 146 1402.2657
49 CMS Collaboration Identification techniques for highly boosted W bosons that decay into hadrons JHEP 12 (2014) 017 CMS-JME-13-006
1410.4227
50 CMS Collaboration Boosted Top Jet Tagging at CMS CMS-PAS-JME-13-007 CMS-PAS-JME-13-007
51 J. Thaler and K. Van Tilburg Identifying boosted objects with N-subjettiness JHEP 03 (2011) 015 1011.2268
52 CMS Collaboration Identification of b-quark jets with the CMS experiment JINST 8 (2013) P04013 CMS-BTV-12-001
1211.4462
53 CMS Collaboration Identification of b quark jets at the CMS Experiment in the LHC Run 2 CMS-PAS-BTV-15-001 CMS-PAS-BTV-15-001
54 CMS Collaboration Top Tagging with New Approaches CDS
55 CMS Collaboration CMS Luminosity Measurement for the 2015 Data Taking Period CMS-PAS-LUM-15-001 CMS-PAS-LUM-15-001
56 J. Butterworth et al. PDF4LHC recommendations for LHC Run II JPG 43 (2016) 023001 1510.03865
57 D. Lindley Kendall's Advanced Theory of Statistics, volume 2B, Bayesian Inference, 2nd edn Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society) 168 (2005) 259
58 ATLAS and CMS Collaborations, and the LHC Higgs Combination Group Procedure for the LHC Higgs boson search combination in Summer 2011 CMS-NOTE-2011-005
59 J. M. Campbell, R. K. Ellis, and F. Tramontano Single top production and decay at next-to-leading order PRD 70 (2004) 094012 hep-ph/0408158
Compact Muon Solenoid
LHC, CERN